It’s a heavy metal. It’s linked to learning problems in school children. And every child is exposed
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Feed SubscriptionSocial Media Week Returns to a City Near You: February 13th – 17th, 2012
Next week marks the launch of the fourth annual Social Media Week , a global event with discussions about media use.
Read More »NOAA Halts Reconstruction of Past Climate
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration has abandoned an effort to reconstruct a detailed picture of hour-by-hour changes in the atmosphere stretching back to the 19th century. [More]
Read More »Volunteers Plug Holes in the Climate Record (preview)
Kathy Wendolkowski used to make candy in her spare time.
Read More »Making Liquids Go Bipolar
For a slick, supple mouthfeel, there’s nothing like a suspension of fine droplets of oil in water (or vice versa)--what scientists call an emulsion. Cream, butter and chocolate are emulsions, as are gravy, vinaigrette and cheese
Read More »A Universe from Nothing: Einstein, the Belgian Priest and the Puzzle of the Big Bang
[ Editors' note: The following is an excerpt from theoretical physicist Lawrence M. Krauss's new book, A Universe from Nothing : Why There Is Something Rather Than Nothing (Free Press, 2012). ] [More]
Read More »3-D and infrared vision systems for pilots
Land and See: Infrared and 3-D vision systems combine to help pilots avoid crash landings.
Read More »Mountain Maladies: Genetic Screening Susses Out Susceptibility to Altitude Sickness
On his 27th birthday, David Hillebrandt and his wife Sally began to climb Mount Kenya, the second-highest mountain in Africa after Kilimanjaro.
Read More »La Nina Seems to Have Peaked and Is Set to Decline
GENEVA (Reuters) - La Nina, a weather phenomenon usually linked to heavy rains and flooding in Asia-Pacific and South America and drought in Africa, seems to have reached its peak and is expected to fade between March and May, the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) said on Friday. A weak to moderate La Nina pattern has cooled the tropical Pacific since around October, a considerably weaker event than in 2010-11, the United Nations agency said in a statement. [More]
Read More »Facebook Users Gird for Mobile Ads
Facebook's pages are packed with information--your news feed, info about who's online and advertisements that use personal information to deliver highly targeted sales pitches. Members accept these ads on a PC screen, but what about on smaller mobile devices? [More]
Read More »Smart Phone App Catches Depression Onset
Is your cell phone ringtone-ing off the vestigial hook?
Read More »Don’t Be Dissin’ the Bohr Model!
One of the standout anecdotes in Carl Zimmer’s most excellent compilation, Science Ink (a.k.a. My Favorite Science Book of 2011 And Possibly Ever) occurs in the first few pages: “A former student [physics major] got a tattoo of a cartoon atom on the back of one of his legs
Read More »Smoke and Mirrors: Driving While High on Marijuana Doubles One s Chances of a Serious Car Crash
Image courtesy of iStockphoto/Cabezonication Booze is behind an estimated 2.1 million car accidents each year in the U.S. which cause almost 11,000 traffic fatalities annually . But many drug users have claimed that a few puffs of pot before getting behind the wheel are perfectly harmless.
Read More »New Nuclear Reactors Approved
Vogtle Unit 3 containment vessel bottom head being assembled. Credit- Souther Company In a historic vote earlier today, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission ( NRC ) approved Southern Company’s application to construct the nation’s first nuclear reactors in over 30 years. [More]
Read More »Nuclear Reactor Approved in U.S. for First Time Since 1978
Years of shifting and smoothing Georgia red clay paid off today, as the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) voted to allow construction of two new nuclear reactors
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